County Related
Montgomery County, MD Public Campaign Financing Bill Introduced
Robert Wechsler
According to an
article in the Washington Post, two weeks ago, a public
campaign financing bill (attached; see below) was introduced,
cosponsored by all council members of Montgomery County, MD, a
suburb of Washington, DC with about one million inhabitants, home to
Silver Spring, Bethesda, Rockville, and Gaithersburg.
When a Department Engages In Ethics Advice and Enforcement
Robert Wechsler
What should an ethics program do when an agency or department takes
ethics advice and enforcement into its own hands? This issue has arisen in
Hawaii County, according to two articles in West Hawaii Today, one
from two years ago, the
other from last week.
Broward County IG Report on Countywide Ethics Program
Robert Wechsler
This week, the Broward County (FL) inspector general filed a
Review of the Existing Ethics Structure (attached; see below) of the countywide
ethics program that he oversees, and which came into being via
charter amendments overwhelmingly approved by the county's voters in late 2010.
The 21-page report focuses on a two-part reform recommendation: (1) an ethics
officer who would uniformly interpret the Code and provide
precedential advisory opinions, and
A Government Attorney Ethics Advice Case Study from Florida
Robert Wechsler
Here is a concrete example of the problem of allowing local
government attorneys to provide ethics advice that protects local officials, a problem that
Florida state senator Jeff Clemens and the Florida League of Cities
want to harden into state law in SB 606 (see my
recent blog post for a discussion of the problem).
Ethics Waivers by a Legislative Body
Robert Wechsler
I am a proponent of ethics waivers. But only if they are provided by
an independent ethics commission. When they are provided by
high-level officials or their appointees, they appear to be
self-serving. Why self-serving? Because they create precedents that
will enable those who make the precedents to themselves get ethics
waivers.
Best Practices, The Criminalization of Ethics, and Illness As a Conflict Situation
Robert Wechsler
According to an
article in the Capital Gazette, a former Anne Arundel County
(MD) county executive, who was convicted early this year of a
misdemeanor for misconduct in office, wants to run for office again,
despite the judge ordering, as part of the criminal penalty, that he
not be permitted to run for office for five years.
A Restricted Source Involved in a Preferential Arrest and a Questionable Third-Party Candidacy
Robert Wechsler
Sometimes, conflict of interest matters come disguised as election
law matters. Most of the time, due to secrecy, laziness, or an
inability to draw lines between the dots, no one recognizes the
conflict of interest matter. But sometimes, someone gives the game
away, and it becomes clear how inextricable the two areas can be.
The Conflicts That Arise When Coroners Are Part of a Sheriff Office
Robert Wechsler
A
Bakersfield Californian editorial on Saturday points out the kinds of conflict situation that arise when, to save money, a
coroner office is brought into a sheriff or police department
office.
An Audit Report on the Palm Beach County EC
Robert Wechsler
In an
April 2013 blog post, I wrote about the problems surrounding a
Florida state senator's request for a state audit of Palm Beach
County's EC. That report, drafted by the state legislature's Office
of Program Policy Analysis and Government Accountability, has recently been published, and it includes
the EC's response to the report (attached; see below).
Caught Between a Rock and a Hard Place
Robert Wechsler
What can a local official do when he is required to withdraw from a
matter that involves a close personal friend who's in hot
water due to that official's feud with another official? What do you do when you're caught between a rock and a hard place? The
district attorney of Putnam County, NY is faced with this odd and
difficult mix of personal and public obligations, at least if what
he is saying is true.